The Illusion of Peace in Mamoru Oshii's Patlabor 2

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  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024
  • Here, I examine Mamoru Oshii's commentary on the nature of war and the illusion of peace in the 1993 film, Patlabor 2, by putting it into its historical context and attempting to see into the director's headspace. Enjoy!
    This video was edited by Christopher "MrNiesGuy" Nies. If you're interested, his commissions are open! Reach him on Twitter @MrNiesGuy.
    Sources:
    1993 Interview with Animage magazine: www.nausicaa.ne...
    1996 Interview with Animerica magazine:
    listification.b...
    Anderson, M. Oshii Mamoru’s Patlabor 2: Terror, Theatricality, and
    Exceptions That Prove the Rule (2009).
    Cooney, K. Japan's Foreign Policy Since 1945 (2006).
    Mulloy, G. Japan Self-Defense Forces’ Overseas Dispatch Operations in the 1990s: Effective International Actors? (2011).
    Ruh, B. Stray Dog of Anime: The Films of Mamoru Oshii (2004).
    Special thanks to Clark Cavender, Calvin Atkinson, Van Tarver, Ilya Smirnov, Dan, Henri Taarisen, J. Cleaver, Moon on the Water, Michael Lakavitch, Brian Phillips, Philip Weiss, InfiniteZeke, daysofsummer, Donny Southa, CatXD, R125R11, Gustavo Chau, Kavaran, qwerty23131, Peter Savelyev, Julian Fischer, Giancarlo Navas, Maximilian Bessert, Matt Wismer, Uri Lifshitz, Costanza lo cascio, Niko from kk40, tincho37, Joshua David, Levi, Andre Cirilo Rijo, Some Patron, and all my other Patreon donors!
    If you're interested in supporting the channel, check out my Patreon page here: / jackuts
    Please subscribe if you enjoyed the video and feel free to follow me on Twitter (@JackUTS). Thanks!

Komentáře • 1K

  • @CaptStarlight
    @CaptStarlight Před 5 lety +730

    To quote another site: "You get the feeling that the Cyberpunk period happened a few years ago in-universe, and now everyone has to go back to work."

    • @Raum2901
      @Raum2901 Před 2 lety +22

      The quote is from the site Tv tropes when they tag Patlabor with "Post-cyberpunk"

  • @Rvoid
    @Rvoid Před 5 lety +800

    When I first watched it, I immediately loved that silent montage scene of JSDF patrolling the street of Tokyo. It just struck a chord within me. Fast forward many years later, I got the opportunity to study in Japan. After I finished my study and came home, I rediscover this scene.
    That chord suddenly became a haunting symphony.
    On thing that marked my experience in Japan, despite being so crowded is, how idle everything is. Everything works like a drama, scripted, predictable, hence every little deviation is so amusing. Imposing the image of tanks and armed soldiers upon those memory of idleness and peacefulness, made me appreciate how powerful the message Oshii has had tried to convey through that montage scene.

    • @Rvoid
      @Rvoid Před 5 lety +15

      @@ruhurtin4squrtin34 Ah, but I was merely expressing my subjective experience, in which by then, brought me anew to the context of Oshii's critique. My comment had not yet entered the discourse itself

    • @dragonsword7370
      @dragonsword7370 Před 3 lety +8

      Thanks for that observation friend. Definitely adds an extra layer for the media for us westerners to understand better.

    • @masterzoroark6664
      @masterzoroark6664 Před 2 lety +3

      I'm not from Japan, but I know this "chorf" you said about.
      I'm from Poland, haven't lived in the period of PRL (the time when Soviet Russia owned Poland) and the scenes of tanks patroling streets of cities remind me of the photos from those days.

    • @DrownedInExile
      @DrownedInExile Před 2 lety +13

      My favourite part of that silent montage? The mecha pilot waving to schoolchildren, while his gun-camera tracks his eye movement. I've always found that image particularly haunting.

  • @weirdy8
    @weirdy8 Před 5 lety +940

    In my mind, this is still the greatest achievement of Oshii's career. One particular shot where a highly armed war machine is on standby and a group of children wave at the pilot sells this message you've dug deeper into. Great vid.

    • @tskmaster3837
      @tskmaster3837 Před 5 lety +86

      I love that montage of the city under siege with the tanks among the city while the season moves from fall to winter. For me, the best shot is of one lone tank in a snow covered parking lot , foot prints in the foreground but a circle of untouched snow around the tank. Every other scene is commentary about martial law but this is the actual subject in one image. Military in private life, untouched by nature... literally in the case of bathroom breaks.

    • @Gustav_Kuriga
      @Gustav_Kuriga Před 5 lety +30

      @@tskmaster3837 The city wasn't "under siege" though. The very point was that it became a normal scene and people grew used to it after the first day or two.

    • @icipher6730
      @icipher6730 Před 5 lety +4

      @@tskmaster3837 It's technically incorrect to call it a 'siege'.

    • @tskmaster3837
      @tskmaster3837 Před 5 lety +33

      @@icipher6730 It is as much a siege as the Cold War was a war. And the correlation between the two was intentional.

    • @ruhurtin4squrtin34
      @ruhurtin4squrtin34 Před 5 lety

      pat2 has better animation than gits 95 although point of movie is pointless.

  • @andrewchen7687
    @andrewchen7687 Před 3 lety +920

    When he talks about the Japanese peace keeping unit in Cambodia struggling with orders to shoot, this isn't really a uniquely Japanese thing. The UN is notorious for just trying to not engage in combat with either side of a conflict. Name literally every other genocide or conflict: Rwanda and Bosnia to name just the famous ones. The UN did jack shit there because they didn't want to take sides.

    • @willywampus3426
      @willywampus3426 Před 3 lety +89

      New resolution makes it for the un peacekeepers now to "shoot back" if they are being shot at, MINUSCA in Mali is basically a un and french controlled anti insurgency operation

    • @professionaldisappointment1654
      @professionaldisappointment1654 Před 3 lety +31

      I still wonder why they put such a heavy ROE on combat troops,might as well send police officers for PKO

    • @willywampus3426
      @willywampus3426 Před 3 lety +9

      @@professionaldisappointment1654 they did it in Sudan I think, in the Darfur region

    • @professionaldisappointment1654
      @professionaldisappointment1654 Před 3 lety +4

      @@willywampus3426 ouh this is cool,thanks for the knowledge

    • @Michael-mh2tw
      @Michael-mh2tw Před 3 lety +21

      I prefer that to a UN that does pick sides. Grass is always greener.

  • @FRODOGOOFBALL
    @FRODOGOOFBALL Před 4 lety +158

    One of my favorite scenes in anime is in Patlabor 2 when a tank crew is watching civilians return to their homes, and in the end they are left alone in the snow. It's really the whole story of the cold war in a single image.

  • @jeremyweaver9598
    @jeremyweaver9598 Před 5 lety +799

    As an American Combat Veteran, I LOVED this movie! But, I loved it long before I enlisted, in 1999. Some of the philosophical elements shaped my own beliefs as an American soldier. Great movie to watch, however, I agree, that most Americans won't "get it".

    • @ruhurtin4squrtin34
      @ruhurtin4squrtin34 Před 5 lety +17

      kudos. but the animation is why pat2 is amazing. even better than gits 95

    • @totorocatbus
      @totorocatbus Před 5 lety +1

      I see you're subscribed to CTH :)

    • @FortuneZer0
      @FortuneZer0 Před 4 lety +41

      I was just a peace time conscript but i absolutely agree. There is a deeper level in this movie most people cant quite resonate with. It is my favourite movie.

    • @mariuspoppFM
      @mariuspoppFM Před 4 lety

      @@jb76489 He isn't

    • @militaristicsoldier856
      @militaristicsoldier856 Před 4 lety +7

      jb76489 okay kid

  • @mitrooper
    @mitrooper Před 5 lety +1968

    How I miss traditional animated Anime like this, especially the hand animated mecha... Thanks to CG, It's truly a dying art.

    • @Demanufactur3r
      @Demanufactur3r Před 5 lety +113

      One of the main reasons I return to these classic films time to time. Animation and design like this just breathes skill and love for the craft.

    • @laos85
      @laos85 Před 4 lety +21

      Pffff dying art? Are you joking me?

    • @kurisu3000
      @kurisu3000 Před 4 lety +115

      @@laos85 Cel animation is a dying art. It's cheaper for studios to use digital rather than Cel.

    • @ls200076
      @ls200076 Před 4 lety +21

      @@kurisu3000 And can you blame them.

    • @laos85
      @laos85 Před 4 lety +9

      @@kurisu3000 cel animation or digital hand drawn animation only dies in a lazy company.

  • @simonlam33
    @simonlam33 Před 2 lety +160

    Movie released in 1996, and yet in 2022, the movie's political commentary still very relatable to current geo-political situation.

    • @ohgodwhy9853
      @ohgodwhy9853 Před 2 lety +5

      *93

    • @ynraider
      @ynraider Před rokem

      Reminds me of 9/11 being an #InsideJob as well... and that was in 2001AD! Aerial attack on multiple Western Infrastructure/"War on Terror" and all...🤷🏿‍♂
      President Dick Cheney starting fake wars against CIA operatives from 1980s, specifically for US Military/Corporate/Civilain profit gains...
      #DystopiaNow

    • @rotritter
      @rotritter Před rokem +4

      aged like wine indeed

    • @richmcgee434
      @richmcgee434 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Even more so in 2023, with Japan starting on what looks to be a significant re-armament program that will make them a regional military powerhouse if all goes as planned.

    • @kagami3665
      @kagami3665 Před 5 měsíci +4

      After the wars in Ukraine and Gaza, this movie feels more realistic; our peace is indeed built on bloodshed.

  • @ashmazyn
    @ashmazyn Před 5 lety +120

    The direction of this film is magnificent

  • @Jaqrkazi
    @Jaqrkazi Před 2 lety +87

    Feels poetic watching this in 2021 with recent developments in Japan and the far east in general. It seems that, whether Japan wants to wake from the dream or not, reality is starting to force its way into the illusion in the form of the escalating situation in the south china sea.

  • @TheFufuway
    @TheFufuway Před 4 lety +50

    I wish anime still looked this good today.

  • @captainjosue
    @captainjosue Před 3 lety +38

    The first Patlabor movie had echoes of Biblical prophecy while Patlabor 2 was shadowed under the historical context of the Japanese occupation and the questionable effectiveness of the UN. Absolutely brilliant work. I had to watch both movies multiple times to fully encapsulate the hidden messages within the movie. Some of the best anime of all time

  • @Kagemusha08
    @Kagemusha08 Před 5 lety +241

    Hugely underrated. In my opinion it edges Ghost in the Shell as Oshii's best work.

    • @ruhurtin4squrtin34
      @ruhurtin4squrtin34 Před 5 lety +4

      yes. i have been telling gits 95 fans that...at least animation wise.

    • @lilchinesekidchen
      @lilchinesekidchen Před 4 lety +27

      TBH, ghost in the shell 2 was way better than the first. Oshii just has a habit of making amazing sequels that trump their first movie

    • @FauxtakuLounge
      @FauxtakuLounge Před 3 lety

      It is possibly the best action anime out there.

    • @ohgodwhy9853
      @ohgodwhy9853 Před 2 lety +1

      agree.
      Oshii's personal best.

    • @ynraider
      @ynraider Před rokem +2

      @@FauxtakuLounge Patlabour 1, War In The Pocket, Wings of Honneamise, Gunbuster("Ender's Game"-inspired?), Jin Roh: Wolf Brigade, Cannon Fodder(Memories anthology), GitS: SAC, and Cowboy Bebop Movie; also have insane military action sequences with brutal character context...
      PL2 is definitely Oshii's best work.

  • @WanderingMindSR
    @WanderingMindSR Před 4 lety +107

    This is definitely some of the most damning commentary I have ever seen from anime as a whole. It's further compounded by the fact that a lot of works seem to shy away from this kind of political commentary. I studied Japanese history heavily during my university days and a lot of the film stuck out to me with what it was depicting and trying to convey. It's probably why despite being American, I was able to "get it". And I'd get more out of it on a second watch.

    • @Balladency95
      @Balladency95 Před 3 lety +2

      Thank for sharing that bit of thought. I also have that same sentiment, despite coming from the angle of localized social outcast.
      Honestly, sometimes I wonder if such contempt is justified, because in the end I'm just as powerless to make a difference. Feels a bit like a hypocrite who can only walk backwards in defiance...

  • @stephennootens916
    @stephennootens916 Před 5 lety +313

    The Patlabor films often remind me of the Ghost in The Shell franchise (minus the live action movies) in the fact there is a lot heavy complex political action that on some level makes wish I was as smart as the characters in the anime. Maybe it's because I don't know the the government system as well as the one in my own country (America) which seems simple to me.

    • @totorocatbus
      @totorocatbus Před 5 lety +38

      Same director too!

    • @jintsuubest9331
      @jintsuubest9331 Před 5 lety +47

      Took a couple us government related classes, during highschool and collage currently. Long story short, they are just as fuck up, but on different issue. One big problem is in order to change the bad stuff, you need the people benefiting from the bad stuff vote to change the bad stuff (aka vote against themself), yea good luck on that.

    • @zeitgeistx5239
      @zeitgeistx5239 Před 5 lety +15

      @@jintsuubest9331 too bad that they dont reach you that you dont live in a democracy. You live in a fake democracy where rural states gets 3 times the electoral votes per person that the most populous states. Good old America.

    • @desamster
      @desamster Před 5 lety +5

      I think it's more likely due to Mamoru Oshii's films being full of swollen, pretentious philosophical debate.

    • @DeathToJihad
      @DeathToJihad Před 5 lety +10

      Ghost in the Shell definitely has similar themes, and is kind of an anxious look at what might happen if the facade of false peace were to slip completely, and Japan couldn't even fall back on being a subordinate of the US.

  • @otastorian
    @otastorian Před 5 lety +122

    The Patlabor series is one of my all time favorites in all of media, and while I'll always hold the TV series as my favorite iteration, there's absolutely no denying that the pure artistry of Oshii's films blows it out of the water.
    This video definitely seemed different, so it makes to see MrNiesGuy was on editing here. I hope he comes back to do some more work with you in the future, because this came out fantastically. I've been hoping to see more focus on academia rather than pseudo-intellectualism and competent but mostly unresearched essays, and your channel was one that I could see paving the way for that. I look forward to seeing more stuff like this from you in the future!

  • @thecountofmontecristo2796
    @thecountofmontecristo2796 Před 5 lety +142

    I heard that Shin Godzilla shows the issues of Japan's bureaucracy as well.

    • @Nadia1989
      @Nadia1989 Před 4 lety +36

      It does, with painful accuracy

    • @MrBoygiles
      @MrBoygiles Před 4 lety +38

      I believe it was made as a response to the Fukushima nuclear disaster, which was widely criticized for feet dragging and endless committees.

    • @guicho271828
      @guicho271828 Před 2 lety +3

      though it has some positive tone, with that cabinet resignation beam

    • @jmssun
      @jmssun Před 2 lety +4

      Shin Godzilla is not a Kaiju film like people thought
      We need to see it as a Monster vs Monster film :
      An evolving monster in flesh form
      Vs
      an evolving monster of bureaucracy

    • @HonestObserver
      @HonestObserver Před 6 měsíci +3

      Interesting Akira, which also becomes a kaiju film, features a corrupt useless bureaucracy in charge of the city, and then a military coup. Lots of common themes

  • @martinlagrange8821
    @martinlagrange8821 Před 5 lety +43

    Patlabor 2 is without doubt one of my favourite Anime films - and for all the reasons given. Its very grown up, and and my Japanese best friend tells me he struggles with some of the language used ! The deep seriousness of its theme is gives its tremendous stature even now. All three of the films are spectacular - and I heartily recommend WXIII-Wasted 13 (Patlabor 3) as one of the finest syntheses of detective story and SF-horror ever made in Anime (where SV2 are present only on the periphery, increasing the impact of the central story). Loved the analysis, and - I would point out - instantly understandable to yours truly !

  • @RioBrando_
    @RioBrando_ Před 5 lety +56

    Patlabor 2 is a work of art.

    • @ruhurtin4squrtin34
      @ruhurtin4squrtin34 Před 5 lety +2

      i found it better than gits 95 which states had a higher budget but looks cheaper..ie see background high rises.

  • @CBs-House
    @CBs-House Před 5 lety +68

    I watched this when I was young, maybe a few years after its release. I was just out of art school and I didn't learn or know anything politics whatsoever at university, but I liked Patlabor a lot. So of course I was excited to see a Patlabor movie but I didn't know at all what the heck I was watching. Thanks for explaining it, now that I'm actually middle aged and much smarter maybe I'll go back to it.

  • @Virginio_Carvalho
    @Virginio_Carvalho Před 4 lety +19

    The Wyvern scene is one of most tense I have watch !!!!

    • @lazukk3735
      @lazukk3735 Před 3 lety +4

      That's one of the best fighter jet sceens in all of cinema

  • @Featinwe
    @Featinwe Před 5 lety +127

    I was kind-of shocked by the marshall law scenes - we had marshall law in my country (Poland) many years ago (before I was born), with similar scenes of tank on the streets, except it was't so nice for the people... this was also for a "phony peace" reasons... anyway, I wonder if Oshii was inspired by that. All in all around 10 years later he made a movie in Poland (Avalon). The scenes also heavily resembled those from Angel's Egg (which again was reminescent of Warsaw Uprising from WWII). Maybe i'm seeing too much :D great vid, it explained a lot!

    • @meesalikeu
      @meesalikeu Před 4 lety +2

      Jakub Badełek well that is an interesting take. i think you are right that must be an influence as well.

    • @cjmanson5692
      @cjmanson5692 Před 5 měsíci

      > we had marshal law in my country (Poland) many years ago (before I was born), with similar scenes of tank on the streets, except it wasn't so nice for the people...
      Let me guess: The marshal law imposed by Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski against the people of Poland in an effort to crush the anti-communist Solidarity trade union, right?

  • @powerofberzerker9487
    @powerofberzerker9487 Před 4 lety +16

    Patlabor 2 is another Oshii's masterpiece I believe. The director is slowly becoming my all time fav one. I would recommend every movie that he directed, including the live-action features.

  • @charlestran7309
    @charlestran7309 Před 5 lety +30

    They release this again in the cinemas because I would definitely go watch it. My favourite childhood Anime movie ever.

  • @finlaymiles9798
    @finlaymiles9798 Před 5 lety +84

    what a way to start the new year!!!!

  • @micheljavert5923
    @micheljavert5923 Před 3 lety +8

    A very very favorite movie of mine from so many years ago. It's the music and the visuals, I think. It is a quiet movie. Contemplative. There's a quote from it that has stuck with me for years: "It may be an immoral peace. Maybe an unjust peace. But an unjust peace is still better than a just war." I've always thought about about that line of thinking.

  • @tacticalderpy2077
    @tacticalderpy2077 Před 3 lety +11

    I found this on DVD, in a dollar bin in 2018. Bought it on a whim. I thought it was fantastic. The story to the art to the sound.

  • @chrisbullock3504
    @chrisbullock3504 Před 3 lety +16

    This movie is probably my favorite piece of media ever made. its just such a deep, subtle thriller. and IMO the original dub is fantastic in both the writing and the VA's. This movie is relevant now more than ever.

    • @Jaytecx
      @Jaytecx Před 3 lety +1

      That intro. Wow :-)

  • @0002-g9m
    @0002-g9m Před 5 lety +284

    Peace can only exist because others are threatened with the alternative to peace. You can only reject violence because someone else carries out violence for you.

    • @elgerifico
      @elgerifico Před 5 lety +48

      Very well said. Heinlein also put it well:
      “Anyone who clings to the historically untrue -- and -- thoroughly immoral
      doctrine that violence never solves anything I would advise to conjure
      up the ghosts of Napoleon Bonaparte and the Duke of Wellington and let
      them debate it. The ghost of Hitler would referee. Violence, naked
      force, has settled more issues in history than has any other factor; and
      the contrary opinion is wishful thinking at its worst. Breeds that
      forget this basic truth have always paid for it with their lives and
      their freedoms.”
      Sadly, breeds like the author of this video, and traitors like Oshii, that would rather see Japan conquered and put under the yoke of a foreign power just to virtue signal, never get to experience the consequences of their idiocy because braver, better men spill blood to defend their right to be imbeciles.

    • @DP-fq7iy
      @DP-fq7iy Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks, I was going to post something similar.

    • @mariuspoppFM
      @mariuspoppFM Před 4 lety +26

      The Heinlein quote is actually the point of the movie, moron

    • @deadby15
      @deadby15 Před 4 lety +12

      @@elgerifico The concept of nation state itself is a rather recent one, and I think it is quickly losing its significance in history.

    • @lilchinesekidchen
      @lilchinesekidchen Před 4 lety +5

      adding to this, i would prefer a world where everyone is accountable to for their own violence instead of displacing it for other people to carry out for them, and then feeling beholden to the people who are violent for them.
      this is how police and army forces are created. how power is concentrated, and abused.
      there will always be violence in the world, I’d just prefer a world where we don’t professionalize it (through the creation of military and police careers)

  • @DJDTHTRP
    @DJDTHTRP Před 4 lety +8

    I always knew there was something special about it when I first watched it on Action Channel many years ago. The appreciation deepens so much when you understand all of the historical context. Fantastic job here.

  • @RGordonHaase
    @RGordonHaase Před 3 lety +5

    this is literally one of the best video essays I've ever seen on a piece of media, super well crafted and spoken, excellent sources and wonderful parallel visuals and edits. excellent work

  • @85futureshock
    @85futureshock Před 4 měsíci +3

    In an era were anime is afraid to grow up and where anything political would either be taboo or not considered commercial enough, the world needs a movie like Patlabor 2 more than ever.
    Sadly, it looks like we may never get a film like this again.

  • @Hyperion9700
    @Hyperion9700 Před rokem +9

    Some of the scenes in this film outshine a lot of modern anime in terms of complexity and detail. It's a timeless masterpiece. If you don't like Mecha anime, this is the Mecha anime for you !

  • @Zheesh7349
    @Zheesh7349 Před 5 lety +22

    *Sigh* New entries on the "Plan to Watch" list, what a way to start the new year!On serious note, Thank you for showing this franchise! I didn't even know it existed probably because it was made in the "far past " of 1980's, but it really seems like a hidden gem. While I am here Happy New Year everyone!

    • @DrummerDucky
      @DrummerDucky Před 5 lety +1

      If you are ready to go back as far as the '30s, there are more than 200 movies made with the same creative intensity. It takes a while to find them out because most list are full of overbloated oscar-bait or underwritten "audience favorites".

    • @Zheesh7349
      @Zheesh7349 Před 5 lety

      @@DrummerDucky Yeah i know there are countless gems hidden under the sands of time, but that is why it is always a welcome when our favorite youtubers talk about them :D

    • @DrummerDucky
      @DrummerDucky Před 5 lety

      @@Zheesh7349 Did you get the time to watch Patlabor 2 since then? I find that watching a movie every day is one of many ways to keep one's mind "exercised"!

    • @Zheesh7349
      @Zheesh7349 Před 5 lety

      @@DrummerDucky Yeah I finally watched it. My expectations weren't low after this video, but it toppled them with ease. It is indeed a fantastic movie!

    • @DrummerDucky
      @DrummerDucky Před 5 lety

      Oshii's argument on "just war, unjust peace" is bit muddled (it's a recurring issue with his writings) but man. the art direction, the music, the character interactions (especially Gotoh) are so mesmerizing, I can't help but watch it again and again every year that goes by, much like the 1995 Ghost in the Shell, or the infamous Ninja Scroll.

  • @aaaaaaaaaa97
    @aaaaaaaaaa97 Před 2 lety +23

    This movie still stays 100% relevant to today.

  • @zackbatcountry3361
    @zackbatcountry3361 Před 3 lety +10

    This is a rly well put together video ,it does an amazing job of deconstructing the movies themes interesting to see how a lot of these older anime were a warning of the future,our society , our reliance on technology and the loss of our our humanity

  • @Pewpewpew182
    @Pewpewpew182 Před 4 lety +16

    The scene with Goto discussing an "Unjust peace" is one of the most haunting scenes in all of cinema.
    Music, tone, presentation..... amazing.
    The 90s dub sold that whole film.

    • @shaesullivan
      @shaesullivan Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/r2sqdudEle4/video.html

    • @inuyashason81
      @inuyashason81 Před rokem +1

      One thing the defense force spook talked about to goto, the Hollywood chewing gum war, that is what I am trying to find out what he is talking about, there is cold war, civil wars, but Hollywood chewing gum war?

    • @juresaiyan
      @juresaiyan Před 11 měsíci +2

      I agree

  • @jasoncarroll7473
    @jasoncarroll7473 Před 5 lety +5

    Just finished watching Patlabor 2 only an hour ago. This was perfect to show up in my suggestions. Excellent commentary on one of my favorite Anime films

    • @ruhurtin4squrtin34
      @ruhurtin4squrtin34 Před 5 lety

      did you think animation better than gits 95? and was it remastered?

  • @macuma5533
    @macuma5533 Před 5 lety +3

    That conversation they have in the boat never fails to give me goosebumps.

  • @FurryWrecker911
    @FurryWrecker911 Před 4 lety +4

    Had to watch this movie twice to actually get it. I really wish there was more like this out there. Greatly enjoyed this.

  • @xmlthegreat
    @xmlthegreat Před 3 lety +4

    Wow. This really deepened my understanding of the film, I knew about the premise and understood some of the commentary Oshii was trying to make (unjust peace versus just war is mentioned enough in the film that a clueless person like me can get it), but I feel like I get it more clearly now.

  • @Jaytecx
    @Jaytecx Před 3 lety +4

    This film still has the best opening introduction sequence I have seen in any motion picture.

  • @ricardoalvesdeoliveira3761

    All these years and I didn't realise I couldn't fully grasp the depth of the movie. Now I have to rewatch it. Great video, thank you very much!

  • @Girthon1
    @Girthon1 Před 5 lety +8

    A superb analysis of one of the true anime greats. Thank you!

  • @BeanyBabe420
    @BeanyBabe420 Před 5 lety +4

    Great video that I think summarises a lot of this film's strongest aspects. This really is a fantastic film when viewed through the lens of post-WWII Japanese politics, that I think still holds value today.

  • @lions1729
    @lions1729 Před 4 lety +6

    This film is a work of art - flawless art.

  • @davidgibson4901
    @davidgibson4901 Před 4 lety +2

    Patlabor 2 is one of my favorite animated films of all time, and this incredible video has added to my love for this movie by unlocking wonderful hidden depths. Very well done.

  • @nobom
    @nobom Před rokem +1

    Mamoru Ishiis signature "eerie scenes" are mesmerizing. With the contrasting bright lights/dark shadows, the camera views, the strange background music, it's so unsettling and captivating. He makes even a parking lot look like art. I love it.

  • @IanPeon
    @IanPeon Před 2 lety +4

    A truly beautiful movie, from the characters to the story to the animation, this is a finely crafted work of art. That said, it really demands a lot from it's audience, from knowledge of socio-economic world policies and history, to listening to acres of dialogue, albeit expertly written. When it ends you get the feeling you've seen deeply into what reality we're all living in, having peered directly at the most reflective mirror you've ever seen.

  • @conchezness3744
    @conchezness3744 Před 5 lety +4

    Thank you for your brilliant analysis and breakdown of one of my favourite animes of all time. Not many appreciate the genius of this masterpiece in cinema

  • @romerobjuancarlos
    @romerobjuancarlos Před 3 lety +2

    This film is beautiful, hauntingly so, and it is one I have watched countless times alongside GITS. When something is layered with meaning, intent and crafted with a very clear vision this is the end result: a piece that is often cited, discussed, and analyzed.
    A classic. Period.

  • @ciel0_091
    @ciel0_091 Před rokem +2

    My gosh! What a wonderful job you did here. I actually sat down and payed attention to the whole video you just explained about Patlabor. It's unbelievable how people really have only one concept about Japan, but in reality it's more than just the view that gives us a certain attraction to a a place on this world. I highly agree on what you said here. 11:13
    There are many ways us as a society can be more involved in making peace rather than starting it or separating ourselves and not doing anything to prevent it.
    -Cielo V.

  • @jjstarrprod
    @jjstarrprod Před 2 lety +20

    Absolutely great breakdown of this hidden gem of an anime masterpiece.
    It's probably the most political movie anime has ever produced in its entire history. So political that I recall in an old interview with Oshii that he said Miyazaki (also a very political director, since he's been very active in the communist circle in Japan in the 60's and 70's and was one of its main organizers when it came to their public protests), actively berated him for Patlabor 2, saying that his movie is a big bunch of lie. When you have the most legendary anime director of Japan vehemently commenting on your movie, that's when you know you've made it ^^ !

  • @JustinY.
    @JustinY. Před 5 lety +301

    War, war never changes.

    • @JohnUdeogu
      @JohnUdeogu Před 5 lety +3

      you're right, man

    • @jag3596
      @jag3596 Před 5 lety +9

      6/10 Damn. You're active this new year. Anyway, old meme.

    • @trytobedied
      @trytobedied Před 5 lety +27

      War has changed.
      It's no longer about nations, ideologies, or ethnicity. It's an endless series of proxy battles, fought by mercenaries and machines.

    • @ononono7016
      @ononono7016 Před 5 lety

      Kantai Collection

    • @ononono7016
      @ononono7016 Před 5 lety +2

      Alone the WW1, WW2, and, of course, the Cold War truly show how much war itself has changed.
      There are also the Geneva Protocol that "bans" certain weapons. We literally try to make war morally humane.
      Even the use of soldiers varies: Child soldiers and bad planning(lots of unnecessary death) is frowned upon. Different weapon skills. Different ways to die. Globalisation is making the enemy more human...
      Terrorism.
      "War never changes" is a stupid way to see it. We are humans, we adapt.

  • @ZombryaTheDark
    @ZombryaTheDark Před 5 lety +2

    I've been obsessed with this movie in soundtrack so much recently. So glad people still know this gem

  • @user-pj8zl4ex8o
    @user-pj8zl4ex8o Před 3 lety +9

    IT TOOK CZcams 2 YEARS TO RECOMMEND THIS TO ME! Google you have failed yet again at grasping my inclinations.

  • @KENSHI_Anime
    @KENSHI_Anime Před 3 lety +3

    Thank for your views on this amazing movie. Believe it or not, this movie made me a fan in 1995, which means it was out in Japan 2 years already! This was indeed the "golden era" of Anime in which people in the Anime industry like Mr. Oshii would make a movie like this....

  • @Dexter01992
    @Dexter01992 Před 2 lety +9

    9:14 these words are just so damn perfect for current situation in Russia.

    • @47ex1
      @47ex1 Před 2 lety +1

      This comment didn't age well

    • @ydk1k253
      @ydk1k253 Před rokem

      ​@@47ex1This comment did aged well

  • @diegozimmerman8261
    @diegozimmerman8261 Před 2 lety +1

    As fan of the Patlabor franchise I find your take on Patlabor 2 extraordinarily good. Execution of the video and the history behind P2 is professional. I found myself wanting a longer version as to learn more of what I had no CLUE of the significance of what the author was trying to tell me. Know that I have some Idea …….thank you!!!

  • @wt5833
    @wt5833 Před 4 lety +1

    I watched this because I recently became aware of the series, but have no easy viewing access. This analysis was thoroughly excellent. Few films of any genre are so deep yet nuanced. A casual ‘western’ watch would miss half the film. This and Jin Roh. Thank you for the education.

  • @hedgehog3180
    @hedgehog3180 Před 2 lety +5

    Patlabor's sharp political commentary and it's ability to deliver it with surgical precision by using amazing cinematography is what makes it one of the best Real Robot franchises that can actually stand shoulder to shoulder with Gundam, it's both an amazing subversion and an evolution of the genre. It's also interesting how the point of the original Gundam was to remind Japanese society of the horrors of war because Tomino saw a rising jingoism and then almost 30 years later Patlabor is commenting on how the result of said jingoism was Japan becoming complicit in imperialist violence and being once again dependent on it. It's a kind of running dialouge within the Real Robot genre where 86 Eighty-Six and Gundam Hathaway are the latest entries.

    • @antonlongbow5122
      @antonlongbow5122 Před rokem

      Glad you mentioned 86 Eighty Six. Wish it would get more recognition.

  • @stanislavnepochatov8381
    @stanislavnepochatov8381 Před 5 lety +108

    I think any peace is far more better than any kind of war. Cause Mamoru Oshii's native city were never shelled by artilery on his memory like was mine. Japan 'false' peace allows them to rapidly develop country and avoid Vietnam and several other wars.
    But even here in Ukraine I see splitting of reality: in city about 70 km from front lines war reality is not so prominent. In capital it's almost unseen.

    • @anuvisraa5786
      @anuvisraa5786 Před 5 lety +12

      you know the guy grow during the reconstruction of the second world war

    • @celebrim1
      @celebrim1 Před 5 lety +31

      You can only think that if you think 1980's and 1990's Japan is an example of a false peace.
      A truly unjust peace is worse than war, and often has more casualties. If you want an actual example of an unjust peace today, take a look at what is going on in Venezuela right now.

    • @Moosemoose1
      @Moosemoose1 Před 5 lety +18

      The most obvious example of false peace is the United States of America. This nation's entire existence and prosperity has been because of either war or "false peace" - the threat of war. This is why American police are militarized and brutal, why the United States repeatedly overthrows governments and installs dictators via coups and threats of invasion, why the US military is directly involved in over 30 conflicts in dozens of nations around the globe at any time, why the USA has 900 military bases worldwide and responds to even the slightest threat against it with overwhelming violence. The motto of the USA is simply "Comply or Die".

    • @celebrim1
      @celebrim1 Před 5 lety +7

      Oh good grief, please spare us your complete lack of historical perspective.

    • @stephenking6966
      @stephenking6966 Před 5 lety +3

      @Sternia Hoenheim Why would you want to nuke the poor Mexicans who are already suffering from drug cartels and rampant crime? (I'm just making fun of the fact that the term America applies to more than just the United States)

  • @thesophistcatedotaku8091
    @thesophistcatedotaku8091 Před 3 lety +1

    This is one of my favorite films. I love the conversation between Goto and Irakawa. One of my favorite speeches.

  • @tomimn2233
    @tomimn2233 Před 5 lety +20

    I remember myself as a kid walking into this movie thinking it was another one of those japanese giant mechs action movie and little else.
    ...
    took me about close to twenty years to finally understand what the hell this movie was about.

  • @HZAres
    @HZAres Před 3 lety +3

    somehow more than 20 years on, this is more relevant than ever

  • @YF365
    @YF365 Před 3 lety +4

    @UnderTheScope you made an error in your video in the 2 minute mark. It's a common error that most people make, because it requires deeper understanding of the situation to make sense of.
    Article 9 of the Japanese constitution, which forbids an offensive army, was made BY THE JAPANESE. It was not made by the USA. In fact, the USA protested Article 9 at the time it was made, because the USA wanted Japan to rearm itself into an ally against the USSR.
    Why would Japan want to abandon their military? Because the Japanese at the time blamed the WW2 disaster on their military. The Japanese government at the time, was de facto ruled by their military, with Japanese civilian leadership often assassinated to keep control. You can see the themes of Japanese distrust of their own military in many anime, including Patlabor 2 (it does feature a military coup).
    I'm not trying to put you down, but it's important that I educate you on this. The world hates the USA enough. We don't need to fill the world with more fake news/history to fuel more anti-Americanism

  • @Smokedship
    @Smokedship Před 4 lety +1

    God bless people like the presenter who appreciate the true depth and convey the actual message that such artists try and convey... Excellent job done!

  • @Hirogawa
    @Hirogawa Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks for this video. Patlabor is such an incredible series, and having someone break it down its movies, specially focusing on Oshii's superb insight, is incredible. I hope more people catch on this fantastic show because of your video.
    Once again, thank you very much.

    • @ruhurtin4squrtin34
      @ruhurtin4squrtin34 Před 5 lety

      yeah i asked a no of utube anime reviewers to do pat2 esp if they liked gits 95 but none did. but this reviewer didnt help me understand obvious message. by oshii.

  • @lamecasuelas2
    @lamecasuelas2 Před 3 lety +6

    I remember watching Patlabor as a kid and everytime an episode ended i was a little confunsed, i had the feeling that There was something deeper that i didn't fully understand.

  • @caioveras7642
    @caioveras7642 Před 3 lety +5

    My favorite ost of all

    • @Jaytecx
      @Jaytecx Před 3 lety +1

      Don’t you just love the main theme? :-)

    • @ohgodwhy9853
      @ohgodwhy9853 Před 2 lety +1

      It's this and MGS1 for me.
      So atmospheric

  • @Pichuscute
    @Pichuscute Před 5 lety +2

    Absolutely perfect video! Just watched this movie for the first time a few weeks ago and it's now easily one of my favorites. You absolutely nailed this video here.

  • @WIZINT
    @WIZINT Před 2 lety +1

    There were interesting parallels to the February 26 incident, as it’s revealed about halfway into the film the day, with a clock that shows it’s midnight and reads 2/27 at the bottom, showing the whole incident started on that same day

  • @JMChladek
    @JMChladek Před rokem +6

    Very thorough and good analysis. And these days with China's provocative behavior and North Korea's seemingly more reckless behavior, I can only imagine what questions are having to be asked in Japanese citizenry and leadership. Then with the death of Shinzo Abe at the hands of an assassin it gets even more thought provoking given when he was Prime Minister he was trying to circumvent article 9 to allow Japan's military to grow. Fascinating.

  • @noiseworks
    @noiseworks Před 5 lety +3

    brilliant breakdown. the ambient music is a perfect match to the content. thanks!

  • @mulpomo8133
    @mulpomo8133 Před 2 lety +2

    Old anime have detailed graphics, love it, even the colour not much as today, but still have a deep nostalgic feeling.

  • @CtrlAltRetreat
    @CtrlAltRetreat Před 3 lety +2

    All of this has become a heck of a lot more relevant to America recently and more nuanced than the open narrative. An illusory peace is not something to be tossed away lightly. It has value in its mere existence.

  • @NathanGatten
    @NathanGatten Před 5 lety +152

    Living in Canada, Ive definately see this as an examination as how a peaceful nation can still be guilty of war, and still become a warzone in a second. Just look at how overpowered americas home army is. And people even cheer them on in celebration! And if parts of canadian society were to break down, america could easily swoop in to conquer on the justification of national safety.
    But canada is guilty too. We still sell weapons to other nations for our own benefit, and join wars that we have no moral right to enter.
    It's a terrifying balance.

    • @DeathToJihad
      @DeathToJihad Před 5 lety +25

      The difference is that America realizes what it is doing, and is moving forward with eyes open, while others are trying to trick themselves. War is sometimes a necessary evil, as is hegemony. Especially in a world where Powers with far less benign intentions feel the same. Only those on our far left politically pretend not to understand this. Canada tries to walk a more middling road, yet even often deploys their military alongside ours, criticizing our relative social benefits without acknowledging the lukewarm commitment of allies is what allows them to spend less on the military and more on social programs.

    • @NathanGatten
      @NathanGatten Před 5 lety +17

      @@DeathToJihad
      Your username is a contradiction in terms. So I'm going to ignore your overly warmongering comment.

    • @LuizAlexPhoenix
      @LuizAlexPhoenix Před 5 lety +12

      @@DeathToJihad
      The US spends more on the military because the military industrial complex owns Washington and the need for spending more on defense to appear strong has become such a moral cornerstone of politics that the government is shutdown. Do not put the bill on social programs.

    • @DeathToJihad
      @DeathToJihad Před 5 lety +11

      @@NathanGatten, It's only a contradiction if you view conflict like a spider's web. Personally, I get the impression you'd simply rather not engage in a complex philosophical debate, and that's why you'd rather hide behind dismissive and empty slurs like 'warmonger'.

    • @DeathToJihad
      @DeathToJihad Před 5 lety +11

      @@LuizAlexPhoenix, I'd strongly disagree with that assessment, as it's overly simplistic, and discounts entirely the dimension of geopolitics in favor of economic conspiracy theories. If our allies spent more, we'd spend less, and spend more on social programs. It's the exact reason they don't want to spend more.

  • @enigmagrieshaber5555
    @enigmagrieshaber5555 Před 3 lety +6

    I would rather live in this illusionary peace rather than living in a reality full of conflict, is what I could say, some might pay the price instead of myself or instead of the people who are experiencing that illusion but you know, we still have peace than having none

    • @tylerdunn9683
      @tylerdunn9683 Před 3 lety

      Your a coward

    • @whisky3k
      @whisky3k Před 3 lety +5

      @@tylerdunn9683 Says the guy living in mom's basement and with mom still washing his underwear. Easy to be idealistic when you've never encountered loss or hardship. There is a reason why many military vets speak out against war. Also, it's "you're".

    • @tylerdunn9683
      @tylerdunn9683 Před 3 lety

      @@whisky3k no one cares what you say kid and second no one gives a flying fuck what a vet has to say those idiots Served their purpose. And third try coming up with a better insult then living in my mom basement then again Originality or Creative thinking is beyond your small leftist brain to begin with

  • @abhinandandutta2079
    @abhinandandutta2079 Před 5 lety +1

    Patlabor 2 is one of my favorite movie. Thank you for covering this.

  • @arkanoid77
    @arkanoid77 Před 4 lety +1

    I've seen Patlabor 2 at launch and it is between my most repeatedly seen movies. I never thought I fully understood it, but nevertheless it was OK that way. Because the best cyberpunk is full of inextricable political mistery. That way the fiction can really throw looming dreads at you so that atmosphere can expand. Your detailed historical commentary is mind-bending for me at this time. Thank you. Terrific and unexpected video.

  • @CSLucasEpic
    @CSLucasEpic Před 5 lety +61

    Do you only analize Anime? Because there is an Argentine comic where this is explored on the other end of the spectrum: Adverting war to keep peace, but from the perspective of those involved in said war. The title is "La Guerra de los Antartes"

    • @neilworms2
      @neilworms2 Před 5 lety +3

      Ohhh interesting. I'll have to check this out.

    • @FrenXIII
      @FrenXIII Před 4 lety +1

      I'm going to check that out right now! Thank you for the tip mate...

    • @satyamprakash7030
      @satyamprakash7030 Před 3 lety +1

      Is it available in English as i don't speak any other language

  • @jakenorthbriz
    @jakenorthbriz Před 3 lety +7

    Really incredible story. I am definitely going to watch this now. We're taught to believe "All's Fair In Love And War" but it's hard to believe that detonating nukes on another country's civilians was a solution

    • @ynraider
      @ynraider Před rokem

      Don't worry, with PM Shinzo Abe 'removed permanently' from Senki Generation Japanese politics, the Imperial Bushido remnants will have their full revenge upon the USA in WWIII.
      Gonna be a wild finish...

  • @OneMoreMeme_INeedYou
    @OneMoreMeme_INeedYou Před 5 lety +1

    Patlabor is one of my favorite films, I’m glad you made such a comprehensive video on it!

  • @pilouuuu
    @pilouuuu Před 3 lety +2

    This feels more relevant than ever in 2021.
    Great video!

  • @lilchinesekidchen
    @lilchinesekidchen Před 4 lety +101

    what i find interesting
    is how in all these Japanese films that try to critique japan’s military system, there is a complete disavowel of Japan’s direct and brutal colonial conquest of asian countries prior to US occupation. like this blame it’s often displaced into other foreign interests (in this case the ultimate problem is that japan’s is being used as a puppet for US military power and global reach)
    Hilariously, the villain of the film is disavowing his own responsibility in the slaughter of his subordinates, like how the fictional government of the film disavows the militarism they perpetuate to maintain their idea of “peace”, just like how the current japanese government disavows any wrong-doing in WW2 and still refuses to apologize to any of the countries they ravaged (with exception to the half assed token apology to the victims of the comfort women program of the japanese army).
    it may be because of censorship in japan, and the government’s unwillingness to be accountable for their ww2 attrocities.
    like i remember even with miyazaki’s Wind Rises, he received backlash for the movie even suggesting that involvement in WW2 was bad for japan (which it ultimately was). knowing miyazaki’s own deep criticism of japanese militarism and the atrocities their armies caused to other peoples, we can see that message of wind rises was already crafted to avoid controversy, and be very pro japan. yet even then, he caught flack for not being 100% pro WW2.
    it just shows the depth of japanese disavowal of political attrocities

    • @KingHalbatorix
      @KingHalbatorix Před 4 lety +7

      You really like that fuckin word don't ya
      Ask someone to beat you with a thesaurus sometime
      Good comment though

    • @tomj2817
      @tomj2817 Před 4 lety +3

      @@KingHalbatorix What word are you talking about? I didn't see anything wrong with his comment, but you seem upset?

    • @williamfeller3319
      @williamfeller3319 Před 4 lety +5

      Tom J I think he was referring to the word disavowal, although I do not understand his frustration in your use of it.

    • @ubuynow
      @ubuynow Před 4 lety +7

      Just curious, how would you make Japan today be accountable for the atrocities of the past. What would you make them do? Japan has apologized many times over the years for they did. The hard fact is, atrocities are happening now and will continue to happen and life will go on.

    • @lilchinesekidchen
      @lilchinesekidchen Před 4 lety +1

      L.E. Munoz reparations to the people and countries they harmed.
      reparations to all the women (and their descendants) forced into their “comfort woman” program
      Long term monetary payments towards the countries they did harm to

  • @Siptom369
    @Siptom369 Před 3 lety +6

    These older anime just look so gorgeous even by todays standards

  • @franzsteredenn6235
    @franzsteredenn6235 Před rokem +1

    Perfect work ! It was a pleasure to watch this just after Patlabor 2, a intelligent thriller with or without "Robots". Didn't know that, before to watch but there is deep reflexion like "Ghost in the Shell" . Good surprise of the week :)

  • @ryanvandalinda12345
    @ryanvandalinda12345 Před 5 lety +2

    What a fantastic video essay. Well done! I'll admit, upon initially watching "Patlabor 2," I did not pick-up on most of the social political commentaries that you've very articulately highlighted with this video essay. I'm going to have to re-watch the film now.

  • @TheRenegadeMonk
    @TheRenegadeMonk Před 3 lety +4

    I'd forgotten how beautiful hand drawn Anime movies were.

  • @Twoface227
    @Twoface227 Před 5 lety +16

    OMG, its been 25 years since this was made?! Damn, I got old, wwww

  • @muninraven3327
    @muninraven3327 Před 4 lety +2

    Such a beautiful and subtle film. On my first viewing, I didn't really understand the underlying politics at play, but there are more than enough pointed dialogue and visual moments that make the film work so well as far as the overarching narrative is concerned. It's a film that gets it's point across, but you don't need to be a historian to appreciate the theme. For some reason, the soundtrack (editing out the more bombastic moments) is one of the pockets of compiled music I most play in the background when I'm sketching, or painting. Mix in the Kyoei no Machi takes from the first film, and some of the third films score; and I find myself with a decent hour plus of material that I can put on loop. A fantastic soundtrack for creative thought.

  • @incyphe
    @incyphe Před 2 lety +1

    great review. a timeless classic. There will never be another one like it. soundtrack also played a huge part in making this movie a whole.

  • @enemia93
    @enemia93 Před 5 lety +3

    Thanks for this very instructive and well documented analysis of a great film (my favorite film btw). Back when I watched it, I didn't have all the detail of the Japanese context in mind. So while this film acts first and foremost as a witness of its time and place, I really felt that it managed to have a(n expected?) broader scope. From today's standpoint, as you said, it still tells a lot about the fragility of our current peace against new kinds of threats, coming from the inside of our countries, here in the West. I mean I live in France and I watched it ~4 years ago, when terrorist attacks were really hot in the news
    Oshii's style of framing, pacing and visual storytelling works really well to tell this story of this illusory peace. Also I really like how it was already experimented in the Early Days OVAs and then pushed way further in this film

    • @ruhurtin4squrtin34
      @ruhurtin4squrtin34 Před 5 lety

      enemia: what khonda was saying is the animation is what made film amazing...

    • @enemia93
      @enemia93 Před 5 lety

      @@ruhurtin4squrtin34 yeah actually Khonda and I already know each other, and we are both French speakers

    • @ruhurtin4squrtin34
      @ruhurtin4squrtin34 Před 5 lety

      enemia: was i somewhat right? i only took francais pour 3 ans.

    • @ruhurtin4squrtin34
      @ruhurtin4squrtin34 Před 5 lety

      enemia: personally oshii's message is somewhat trite and simplistic. personally i found pat2 animation way better than gits 95...although i prefer gits manga and shirow's work.

  • @jamesporquez3682
    @jamesporquez3682 Před 2 lety +5

    This movie made me change my view on peace.

    • @ErikPT
      @ErikPT Před 2 lety

      As they say sometimes peace must be won by engaging in war.

    • @cjmanson5692
      @cjmanson5692 Před 23 dny

      @@ErikPT Hell, I recall a saying that dates back to Ancient Rome: "Si vis pacem para bellum", which translates as, "If you want peace, prepare for war".
      It has been used as the requirement for peace ever since Ancient Rome, multitude of times, actually. For example: pre-WW2 America, during the time Hitler rose to power in Germany and began his march of conquest across Europe, America, under the leadership of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, was embarking on a re-armament policy, not just for America, itself, but for the remaining European nations free of Hitler's tyranny (i.e. the British Empire, the Free French Forces, the USSR, etc.) in the famed Arsenal of Democracy.
      In fact, I recall that several years after, on September 6, 1960, that then U.S. Senator, John F. Kennedy, paraphrased that age-old saying in a speech at the Civic Auditorium in Seattle, WA, which he stated, "It is an unfortunate fact that we can secure peace only by preparing for war."

  • @xpavpushka
    @xpavpushka Před 3 lety +1

    Amazing artwork, amazing music, mature story. One of the best full-length anime.

  • @oliverallen5324
    @oliverallen5324 Před 5 lety +1

    this was really well done. I appreciate you citing sources beyond the film itself to give context to the critical elements of the story.
    Thank you.

  • @TrueSkullLeader
    @TrueSkullLeader Před 5 lety +3

    ... Holy shit. I´m never watching anime with the same eyes again. Really amazing video.

  • @a.thompson5518
    @a.thompson5518 Před 5 lety +4

    This was a interesting analysis on the film. I regarded as my all time favorite film because how genius the plot was, as it felt like Oshii took notes from Tom Clancy. Nice video.

  • @shkeni
    @shkeni Před 5 lety +1

    Excellent video. It always delights me that Patlabor can be both something as heady as this, a wacky comedy or some of the best adult slice of life you can find. There's really little like it.

  • @13Dedmoroz
    @13Dedmoroz Před 4 lety +2

    *Yes. This movie is good. He raises philosophical questions. What do not say, but the best time for humanity was when there was a cold war. Only under the threat of total annihilation did mankind cease to make money from wars. Afraid to upset the balance, people fought at the Olympics, in sports. Or in science. Humanity went into space. Now the cold war is long over. The United States has become the number one terrorist. And wars have become commonplace. No one knows in which next country a “regime” will appear that does not suit the United States. The United States always needs a "bad guy" about whom you can explain everything on TV and then start bombing. Not because the USA is bad. And because without this, they themselves will become a battlefield within themselves under the pressure of contradictions and lack of money for the sale of weapons. Therefore, this anime is very, very good. Such an impression that the authors looked into the future for decades.*